Go to a local indoor gym and tke some classes or go to a local guide sevice and take a beginner course to introduce you to climbing on real rock. I suggest the latter for two reasons. 1) Since you are new to the sport it is very important that you get the right safety fundamentals, which a qualified guide service will teach you. You dont want to just find a random person who offers to show you the ropes unless you are sure you can trust them. This has a disadvantage to it because at least if you are experienced and you find a new partner and they make safety mistakes you will be able to pick up on it, but as a newcomer you might not notice if they attach you to an anchor with a bent gate biner instead of a locking one. Mistakes like that can cost you your life. and 2) real rock is much better to learn on then the gym. You are better at finding holds after you learn on real rock and I feel and this is only my opinion thatit is easier to transition from real rock to gym than vice versa. Many people that have only climbed in a gym find it hard to identify routes on real rock and arent good at finding good holds because they are used to the routes shown with colored tape and the gym holds are obvious. But try both and be safe and have some fun. Hope you grow to love this sport as much as I do.